Social support during breast-feeding helps humans reproduce more

Washington, Feb 15 (ANI): A new study has suggested that the fact that human mothers have support from family while theyre breast-feeding may be a key strategy that enables humans to reproduce more rapidly than other primates.

According to the study, social support helps mothers conserve energy in a way that allows their bodies to prepare for their next pregnancy.

Humans out-produce other primates. So we are examining to what degree this is related to our cultural flexibility, said Barbara Piperata, assistant professor of anthropology at Ohio State University and principal investigator of the research.

But humans have multiple ways to offset those demands that involve more than just eating more or doing less.

Some studies have suggested the human body becomes more metabolically efficient during lactation, requiring less energy or less oxygen to complete physical tasks.

And new human mothers also tend to have other humans around to share the work burden.

However, nonhuman primates that have similar energy demands while breast-feeding single, slow-growing offspring, dont have that same flexibility.

As a result, their reproductive rates are relatively low, averaging a new birth every four to seven years.

We know that negative energy balance on the body lowers a females ability to get pregnant. If humans mediate that, have social support, and are able to maintain or even achieve a positive energy balance, they can get pregnant faster. From an evolutionary perspective and fitness, thats important, Piperata said.

The study was described during the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Chicago. (ANI)